Thursday, July 20, 2017

Nearly Two-Thirds of Russians Now Favor Statues Honoring Stalin and Oppose Memorials to His Crimes

Paul
Goble

Staunton, July 20 – Sixty-two percent
of Russians say that statues and other memorials should be put up in Russian
cities to remind about “the successes of Joseph Stalin,” a new VTsIOM poll
says; but at the same time, 65 percent of them are opposed to any monuments that
recall his crimes.

Young people under the age of 24 are
somewhat more favorably inclined to the erection of Stalin memorials (77 percent)
than the average for all Russians, with pensioners who may have lived under the
Russian dictator also just above the average (63 percent). It is the
middle-aged who oppose such moves (rbc.ru/rbcfreenews/597057059a79472210e669c9?from=main).

Both those who
favor Stalin statues and those opposed say they are defending historical truth.
Fifty seven percent of those favoring erecting statues in his honor say that “people
must know the entire truth,” while 39 percent of those who want memorials to
his victim make the same argument, VTsIOM reports.